Hello, on a 4 socket file server distributing ~90 million files with ~130TiB of data daily, I see a massive slowdown of IO operation after some time (sometimes in less then a day). This slowdown only started as of Kernel 6.x and does not happen with 5.15.x. Have so far tried, 6.0.9, 6.1.27 and 6.6.30 kernel and they all have this same slowdown effect after some time. If the load is taken away from the server and it is nearly idle, it still has this slowdown effect and only recovers after some hours by itself. During this slowdown and idle time I had a look at an rsync process with strace that was uploading some small files to the server and could see the slowdown here was in the rename() system call, all other system calls (read(), write(), newfstatat(), openat(), fchmod(), etc) where not effected: rename(".27095571.iXVMMT", "27095571") = 0 <18.305817> rename(".272629ef.22gv2x", "272629ef") = 0 <18.325222> rename(".275fbacf.UBj6J5", "275fbacf") = 0 <18.317571> rename(".277ab7da.K5y144", "277ab7da") = 0 <18.312568> rename(".27873039.ZQ4Lum", "27873039") = 0 <18.310120> rename(".27ebf01f.t1FKeU", "27ebf01f") = 0 <18.376816> rename(".27f97e6a.kJqqfL", "27f97e6a") = 0 <18.290618> rename(".28078cd9.rV7JdN", "28078cd9") = 0 <18.315415> rename(".28105bb4.gljiDk", "28105bb4") = 0 <18.325392> rename(".282209b1.Cy3Wt2", "282209b1") = 0 <30.188303> rename(".28888272.aUCxRj", "28888272") = 0 <18.263236> rename(".288d8408.XjfGbH", "288d8408") = 0 <18.312444> rename(".2897f455.hm3FG6", "2897f455") = 0 <18.281729> rename(".28d7d7e8.pzMMF6", "28d7d7e8") = 0 <18.281402> rename(".28d9a820.KQuaM0", "28d9a820") = 0 <32.620562> rename(".294ae845.8Y6vYR", "294ae845") = 0 <18.289532> rename(".294fee3f.eccu2p", "294fee3f") = 0 <18.260564> rename(".29581b50.zPTjTh", "29581b50") = 0 <18.314536> rename(".2975d45f.l5FUYX", "2975d45f") = 0 <18.293864> rename(".29b3770a.tlNMvb", "29b3770a") = 0 <0.000062> rename(".29c5e6ee.EexCwZ", "29c5e6ee") = 0 <18.268144> rename(".29d23183.sLqxpd", "29d23183") = 0 <18.344478> rename(".29d4f65.oyjRWj", "29d4f65") = 0 <18.553610> rename(".29dcfab1.Y47Z1B", "29dcfab1") = 0 <18.339336> rename(".29f26c7c.KNZXEe", "29f26c7c") = 0 <18.372242> rename(".2a09907b.SXIgev", "2a09907b") = 0 <18.317119> rename(".2a0c499c.8DiCsM", "2a0c499c") = 0 <18.380393> rename(".2a64b7e8.FPnsB3", "2a64b7e8") = 0 <18.372004> rename(".2a6765c9.t7Z0hj", "2a6765c9") = 0 <18.296044> rename(".2a83d78f.UJVoMu", "2a83d78f") = 0 <18.380678> rename(".2a94e724.AorYof", "2a94e724") = 0 <18.360716> rename(".2a9ea651.EWpBHM", "2a9ea651") = 0 <18.327733> rename(".2a9f1679.xDYq9Q", "2a9f1679") = 0 <18.312850> rename(".2ab0a134.2GWgmr", "2ab0a134") = 0 <18.326181> rename(".2aebf110.pGkILq", "2aebf110") = 0 <0.000188> rename(".2af10031.7Sl5g6", "2af10031") = 0 <18.342683> rename(".2b095066.MCauJX", "2b095066") = 0 <18.375003> rename(".2b217bfd.HauJjr", "2b217bfd") = 0 <18.427703> rename(".2b336a06.w5NN0p", "2b336a06") = 0 <18.378774> rename(".2b40b422.i2v0E6", "2b40b422") = 0 <14.727797> rename(".2b568d13.9zmRRX", "2b568d13") = 0 <0.000056> rename(".2b5ccc66.AFd86P", "2b5ccc66") = 0 <0.000063> rename(".2b7d0a43.qWyxge", "2b7d0a43") = 0 <0.000046> rename(".2b7f968a.QAqOCb", "2b7f968a") = 0 <0.000041> rename(".2ba6dddf.ynNTvi", "2ba6dddf") = 0 <0.000039> rename(".2bce23ab.tliDkg", "2bce23ab") = 0 <0.000040> rename(".2c19e144.CvHPV5", "2c19e144") = 0 <0.000060> rename(".2c7c0651.8x1kQy", "2c7c0651") = 0 <0.000057> rename(".2ca1a6b7.QwujH4", "2ca1a6b7") = 0 <0.000396> rename(".2cc71683.7n9EYA", "2cc71683") = 0 <0.000045> rename(".2cebde90.ZiGcTa", "2cebde90") = 0 <0.000042> rename(".2d057cb4.5PGOIP", "2d057cb4") = 0 <0.000042> rename(".2d29b4a7.A8hfwg", "2d29b4a7") = 0 <0.000043> So during the slow phase it took mostly ~18 seconds and as the phase ends, the renames are very fast again. Tried to change the priority of the process with renice and also enabled some different IO schedulers for the block device, but this had no effect. Could not find anything in the logs or dmesg when this happens. Any idea what could be the cause of this slowdown? What else can I do to better locate in which part of the kernel the IO is stuck? The system has 1.5TiB memory and the filesystem is ext4 on a MD raid10 with 10 nvme drives (Intel P4610): cat /proc/mdstat Personalities : [raid10] md0 : active raid10 nvme1n1[2] nvme4n1[4] nvme5n1[5] nvme3n1[3] nvme9n1[9] nvme8n1[8] nvme7n1[7] nvme6n1[6] nvme2n1[1] nvme0n1[0] 7813406720 blocks super 1.2 512K chunks 2 near-copies [10/10] [UUUUUUUUUU] bitmap: 28/59 pages [112KB], 65536KB chunk Mounted as follows: /dev/md0 on /u2 type ext4 (rw,nodev,noatime,commit=600,stripe=640) The following cron entry is used to trim the device: 25 */2 * * * root /usr/sbin/fstrim -v /u2 >> /tmp/u2.trim 2>&1 A check of the raid was also performed with no issues: [Sun May 5 13:52:01 2024] md: data-check of RAID array md0 [Sun May 5 14:54:25 2024] md: md0: data-check done. cat /sys/block/md0/md/mismatch_cnt 0 CPU's are four Intel Xeon Platinum 8268 and server is a Dell Poweredge R940. Additional information of the kernel config and other information I have uploaded to https://download.dwd.de/pub/afd/test/kernel_problem Regards, Holger